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        Calvary Episcopal Church   
        Memphis, 
        Tennessee 
        January 
        7, 2001 
        The 
        First Sunday After the Epiphany 
       
        Baptism: 
        An Affirmation of Eternal Life 
        The Rev. Margaret B. Gunness 
         
         
        Gospel: 
        Luke 3:15-16, 21-22 
        (This sermon is also available in audio.) 
         
         
      Hear 
        again the remarkable declaration of this morning's Gospel. The scene is 
        along the banks of the Jordan River. Great masses of people have been 
        baptized in the river's muddy waters by a wild looking, rugged man named 
        John. And this is what is recorded in scripture: 
      
        When 
          Jesus had been baptized and was praying, 
          Heaven itself was opened,  
          and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in a visible, tangible form. 
          And a voice came from heaven and said 
          "You, Jesus, you are my Son, the Beloved; how pleased I am with 
          you." 
       
       With this 
        proclamation a change in history was wrought, and human self-understanding 
        has never again been the same. For what we now know and honor as the Holy 
        Trinity, God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit, has been recognized 
        and proclaimed. 
         
        Today is one of the Sundays particularly recommended for the administration
        of the sacrament of Holy Baptism. So it's a good time to look closely
        at all that this
        sacrament means to us, and perhaps especially today, for this is nothing
        less than the Baptism Day of Jesus, the One whom we've come to know as
        the son of Mary and the Son of God.  
         
        I fear that, over the past decades, our understanding of Baptism has become 
        somewhat domesticated - still respected as a sacrament of the Church, 
        but with so much attention paid to the celebrations that surround it that 
        we often fail to explore the deeper meanings of the sacrament which give 
        both shape and substance to our life, our death and the very essence of 
        our faith. 
         
        What I often refer to as the "body language" of our Episcopal 
        Prayer Book shows the trend into the kind of understanding I'm inviting 
        us to enter. Many of you will probably recall your earlier experiences 
        of Baptism using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer. The Service for Holy 
        Baptism was back in the section of the Prayer Book where the more personal, 
        pastoral services were. And the baptisms themselves were usually private, 
        family affairs without even the parish congregation being present or included. 
        But look at where this sacrament is located now in the 1977 BCP. It's 
        right between the celebration of the Great Vigil of Easter and the Celebration 
        of Holy Eucharist. How right that is, and how powerful - for Easter proclaims 
        resurrection, the triumph of life over the power of death, and through 
        Baptism we remember and reenact this victory and are actually ourselves 
        transformed by its power so that death no longer has dominion over us 
        as well. 
         
        I once baptized a baby who'd been adopted from a Latin American country, 
        and her parents had spent some time researching how this sacrament was 
        understood and enacted in the rather primitive region that the child had 
        come from. And one of the stories they'd heard was that oftentimes, particularly 
        in the rural villages, a small wooden coffin was made and on the Sunday 
        of the baptism was brought into the church and filled with water to become 
        the baptismal font. And when the time came, the baby would be taken by 
        the priest and slowly, gently lowered into the coffin, fully submerged 
        in the water, and then triumphantly lifted out again - sputtering, crying, 
        gasping for the breath of life - in a vivid reenactment of birth and death 
        and rebirth through the sacramental waters of Baptism. In this custom, 
        the full meaning of Baptism was startling and surely inescapable and unforgettable. 
         
        And that's the reason why we need to pay very close attention to the Gospel 
        story read this morning, so that we too can begin to comprehend the significance 
        of our own baptism, because our birth and our life and our death are all 
        given the essence of their meaning only in and through this event.  
         
        So there are two things I want to say to you about my own theology, my 
        own understanding of baptism. First of all, I believe that baptism - be 
        it the baptism of Jesus by John in the Jordan River, or your baptism here 
        at Calvary Church or wherever it may have been, or mine on St. Charles 
        Avenue in New Orleans - I believe that Baptism is first and foremost our 
        human response to the action of the living God, that just as it was God 
        who called Jesus to baptism, so it was God who has reached out to you 
        and to me, and called us to be baptized as well. Our baptism is a response 
        to the initiative of God. It is God who has broken down the barriers of 
        passivity in us and in our lives, and because of that, we can know beyond 
        all doubt that we are God's beloved, called by him into a powerful, enduring, 
        eternal relationship. 
         
        And that leads me to a second point, a second truth about Baptism that 
        I want to talk about this morning. And this has to do with my understanding 
        of eternal life. A few months ago, I received a response to something 
        I'd written in an attempt to answer one of the questions on Calvary's 
        explorefaith segment on our Web site. It was a question about the Resurrection 
        of Christ, and somehow the questioner thought my answer implied that I 
        didn't believe in the Resurrection. Well, I do believe in it, because 
        I believe in eternal life. However, in my understanding, eternal life 
        is more than simply life after death. I believe that we are always in 
        eternal life, that we are a part of eternal life before we are born, and 
        that we're a part of eternal life while we are living in these bodies 
        and on this lovely earth, and that we are a part of eternal life when 
        these bodies of ours die, because our soul and our essence lives on eternally 
        within the heart and mind, the presence and the realm of God. Still I 
        grieve the death of someone I love. Still I miss their presence here with 
        me in this world and this life. But all the while I am confident of their 
        life and of their presence in the universe of God and of life. And because 
        of that, they are not gone or lost forever. 
         
        And finally, that brings me back to this morning's Gospel, for I think 
        that this is precisely what was being proclaimed at the Baptism of Jesus. 
        John recognized it immediately. "I'm only baptizing you with water," 
        he said. "Someone much more powerful than I is coming after me. He 
        will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire." And surely, 
        when Jesus had been baptized by John, the voice of God himself came forth 
        from heaven and said, "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am 
        well pleased." Can you see what is happening here? All of the strength 
        and all of the power of the Trinity have come together in this one baptismal 
        event - we hear the voice of the Creator God, we attend the baptism of 
        the Redeeming God, we see the descent of the Spirit, the Sanctifying God. 
        They all are present as One. And in them, through them, we can see the 
        eternal nature of our human lives being affirmed as well. And it is this 
        same affirmation of eternal life which is proclaimed again and again in 
        your baptism and in mine. 
         
        So I ask you to take some of this home with you to pray it and consider 
        it further. Look to see your life in this context of eternal life, your 
        birth as a coming forth from the heart of God, your living as a tangible 
        expression of God, and your death as a continuation deeper into the eternity 
        of God. And then notice that in the life of Jesus, especially in the Baptism 
        of Jesus, God has revealed to us this truth about ourselves as well. So 
        don't be afraid. Be confident and trusting, so that you can reach out 
        with no hesitation to grasp the hand of God which was extended to you 
        from the beginning of life itself and which will continue to hold you 
        throughout all time and even all eternity. 
       Copyright 
      2001 Calvary Episcopal Church 
      Gospel: 
        Luke 3:15-16, 21-22 
        As the people were filled with expectation, and all were questioning 
        in their hearts concerning John, whether he might be the Messiah, John 
        answered all of them by saying, " I baptize you with water; but one 
        who is more powerful than I is coming; I am not worthy to untie the thong 
        of his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire." 
      Now when all 
      the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was 
      praying, the heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in 
      bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, " You are my 
      son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased." NRSV 
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